Abstract:
ABSTRACT
Nursery school education in Kenya is the provision of learning to children before the
commencement of statutory and obligatory education, usually between the ages of three and
five years. This education is highly interactive and social. Through this interaction, gender
differences and roles among learners may occur, creating the need of a gender sensitive
approach to the teaching of these learners. Strategies to be employed in the discourse of
teaching nursery school learners, in order to sustain a common gender sensitive pedagogy for
the creation of gender equality, have not been clearly established. For this reason, this study
aimed at identifying and describing the gendered language brought out in nursery classroom
discourses, analyzing the discourses of gender used in classroom pedagogy and establishing
the effect of the gender related messages on the learners in nursery classroom discourse.
Arguments in this paper were guided by Critical Discourse Analysis Theory by Norman
Fairclough, which connects language to society through three pillars: ideology, struggle for
power and criticality. It was supplemented by Initial Response Feedback (IRF) model of
classroom discourse by Sinclair and Coulthard, and the Conversation Analysis (CA) approach
by Sacks, Schegloff and Jefferson. The study took a descriptive research design which
examined the use of control acts by learners of nursery school age. The study was based on
the observation of learners’ activities in nursery school environment that lasted one academic
term. Further, this study sought to improve the teachers’ and learners’ image and values
concerning traditional feminine and masculine activities and choice. This helps the children
cross traditional gender stereotypes on gender roles. The findings revealed that indeed,
influences of gendered texts and gendered roles socialisation are real in the classroom
discourse, which has greatly impacted on learners’ gender roles identity. The study also
established that gender bias is present in our ECD learning institutions, and indeed, child care
professionals encounter many barriers to promoting genuine equity for children. By valuing
and actively working towards gender equity, the barriers of gender stereotypes and prejudice
can be broken down to enable boys and girls to benefit equally from their child care
experiences. This research will benefit linguistic research as it encompasses several
disciplines, which include linguistic anthropology, conversational analysis, cultural studies,
feminist psychology, social linguistics and feminist media studies.